@magates said:
.....that almost rumbling cinematic bass in your mixes.
I don't mix myself, that is done by the MixMaster, however i have to render the tracks for mix after composing/arranging... certain low sounds just have that sonic, spectral qualities who make them booming in the final product, other can be prepared to boom. The most important factor to do so is the reverb applied, no so much the EQ'ing. The sounds are selected for this booming qualities in the first place, respectively you know which patches kick stomach. Another factor is that we ad sometime a bass unison a octave below, quasi a extra "suboctave" with a sinus wave type sound which is just brought up a tiny bit till the room, or speaker cabinet starts the low "oscillating". This sounds are designed specially for this purpose. All pretty much a very subtle art, and each time a little different.
To have that all under control, you need full range monitoring in a room who is reliable. No way you can control that thru headphones, you would play lottery with your mix. Headphones base on another principle: The human related psychoacoustics with stereo headphones are not the same as for two-channel loudspeaker stereophony. If the audio is binaural (dummy head recording), mixing thru headphone in mandatory. If the mix is for two-channel loudspeaker stereophony, you can't use headphones. I use diffuse-field equalized headphones, designed strictly to IRT, when making surgical editing i.e. cleaning up final tracks for mixing. AT the end you still have artificial low end enhancing at your hand, to push it even further. "JUST A LITTLE BIT MORE BASS PLEASE"!!!
Regards
Angelo Clematide
Producer, Composer, Arranger, Engineer...
Bruce Swedien Enterprises - Miami Music Box
Florida and Switzerland
Chef dāOrchestre De Saint Imaginaire
.